JewishGen.org Discussion Group FAQs
What is the JewishGen.org Discussion Group?
The JewishGen.org Discussion Group unites thousands of Jewish genealogical researchers worldwide as they research their family history, search for relatives, and share information, ideas, methods, tips, techniques, and resources. The JewishGen.org Discussion Group makes it easy, quick, and fun, to connect with others around the world.
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How is the New JewishGen.org Discussion Group better than the old one?
Our old Discussion List platform was woefully antiquated. Among its many challenges: it was not secure, it required messages to be sent in Plain Text, did not support accented characters or languages other than English, could not display links or images, and had archives that were not mobile-friendly.
This new platform that JewishGen is using is a scalable, and sustainable solution, and allows us to engage with JewishGen members throughout the world. It offers a simple and intuitive interface for both members and moderators, more powerful tools, and more secure archives (which are easily accessible on mobile devices, and which also block out personal email addresses to the public).
I am a JewishGen member, why do I have to create a separate account for the Discussion Group?
As we continue to modernize our platform, we are trying to ensure that everything meets contemporary security standards. In the future, we plan hope to have one single sign-in page.
I like how the current lists work. Will I still be able to send/receive emails of posts (and/or digests)?
Yes. In terms of functionality, the group will operate the same for people who like to participate with email. People can still send a message to an email address (in this case, main@groups.JewishGen.org), and receive a daily digest of postings, or individual emails. In addition, Members can also receive a daily summary of topics, and then choose which topics they would like to read about it. However, in addition to email, there is the additional functionality of being able to read/post messages utilizing our online forum (https://groups.jewishgen.org).
Does this new system require plain-text?
No.
Can I post images, accented characters, different colors/font sizes, non-latin characters?
Yes.
Can I categorize a message? For example, if my message is related to Polish, or Ukraine research, can I indicate as such?
Yes! Our new platform allows members to use “Hashtags.” Messages can then be sorted, and searched, based upon how they are categorized. Another advantage is that members can “mute” any conversations they are not interested in, by simply indicating they are not interested in a particular “hashtag.”
Will all posts be archived?
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Can I still search though old messages?
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What if I have questions or need assistance using the new Group?
Send your questions to: support@JewishGen.org
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Follow this link: https://groups.jewishgen.org/g/main
So just to be sure - this new group will allow us to post from our mobile phones, includes images, accented characters, and non-latin characters, and does not require plain text?
Correct!
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Will the current guidelines change?
Yes. While posts will be moderated to ensure civility, and that there is nothing posted that is inappropriate (or completely unrelated to genealogy), we will be trying to create an online community of people who regulate themselves, much as they do (very successfully) on Jewish Genealogy Portal on Facebook.
What are the new guidelines?
There are just a few simple rules & guidelines to follow, which you can read here:https://groups.jewishgen.org/g/main/guidelines
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Sincerely,
The JewishGen.org Team
Re: Can anyone tell me how long has the name Neta ( × Ö¶×˜Ö·×¢ ) has been in use?
Ury Link
The famine name Neta came out from the German names Ageneta or Agnes.
In the 17 century we can find it in the book "Beit Shemuel" about jewish names, Alexander Beider in his book" Ashkenazic Given Names" write that this name was find in 1347 in Frankfurt and after this time also in 1546 in Prague and in more towns in Europe. My conclusion is , that famine name Neta was very old and where used from the middle ages in Jewish families. Best regards Ury Link Amsterdam Holland
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Re: Aleph Yud - what does it mean?
Ury Link
We can not know why it is written,the letters Alef-YUd (א״י) is it on a document or is it perhaps on a Tombstone ?
If it is on a stone then I can find a lot of abbrivations for this letter combination Alef-Yud. Please let me know what it is' then i can give you a good answer. Ury Link Amsterdam,Holland
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Re: Aleph Yud - what does it mean?
In the UK, “AY” refers to “Adath Yisroel” – arguably the frummest ‘sect’ of
Judaism.
Regards,
Daniel Gleek
in London
-- Daniel GLEEK in London daniel@... Searching for: GLEEK/GLICK (Beisagola, Lithuania), ISOWITSKY/KUPCHIK (Dotchener, Poltava & Vorontzowka), GLIKMAN/GLUCKMAN, WEITZENSANG & LIDRAL/LEDDA (Warsaw,Poland), MARCUS (Varniai, Lithuania) etc.
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Re: Immigration to Brazil
Mirta Scheffer
Hello,
I wonder if I could find help with my fathers side of the family. My father Jose Scheffer and his sister and parents lived in Pelotas, Brazil from 1921 to 1930. He was born in Argentina in 1914. His father was Leib Scheffer and his grandfather was Haim Scheffer. Pelotas is the only information I have. Is there any way to find information from this time period in Pelotas? Thank you so much, Mirta Scheffer Elkins Park, PA. USA
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Re: SIG group mailings
The SIGs are still where they have been all along - accessible via the JewishGen home page. The link on the groups page is strictly for this group. Traffic on all the SIG Discussion Group pages has been extremely light for the past few weeks, but they are still here. Nothing has changed in the way you access all other discussion groups on JewishGen. They are still on the old platform.
Chuck Weinstein chuck1@... I rarely receive the SIG digests anymore. When I click on the 'View all your groups.jewishgen.org' or 'Edit your subscriptions here' links I see the only thing I seem subscribed to is "Main". And on that screen i was sent to I can find no way to add or check on my SIG subscriptions. I am posting this topic on the Main list because I am sure a lot of people would like to know the answer. The last message I sent to support only got me a default form reply with a link that did not accept either my new or old jewishgen passwords. So I gave up. Please don't send me another default response because I cannot access the reply. My passwords don't work. Please just answer my question on the Main list so I and the many others in my position can benefit. Thank you! Jeff Malka
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Re: the name Pipa
In English, Pipa is a common nickname for Philipa.
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Re: Aleph Yud - what does it mean?
Stephan Owen Parnes
It may mean “eino yadua” = “not known”
Stephan Parnes Great Barrington, MA USA
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Re: Can anyone tell me how long has the name Neta (נֶטַע) has been in use?
Tess
Thank you so much for all the help, everyone.
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Re: Can anyone tell me how long has the name Neta (נֶטַע) has been in use?
Percy Mett
The name נטע Nuta has been in use for hundreds of years as a cognate to the male name נתן Nathan Perets Mett London
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Re: In Search for DEUTSCH Antal
sylvia.vanderhoeft@...
Hi Amit,
found this information on Family Search: Antal Deutsch( died on 6th of May 1905) : parents : Sàndor Deutsch and Julia Gruber Children : Jolán Deutsch married on 25th of June 1926 to Vilmos Szegeti Ilona Duetsch born around 1895 died 8th May 1945, married to Ödön Vogel, Aranyka/Golda Deutsch born on 25th of June 1891 Ujpest Margit Deutsch born around 1893 Died 15th of August 1944, married to Sàndor Reichard. Szegenyhaz Tér is now Rózák Tér, Budapest VII Hope this helps, Regards,Sylvia
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Google Books Updated
Jan Meisels Allen
A great non-genealogy resource for genealogy is Google Books. It’s been around for 15 years and has over 40 million books in 400 languages available on the website. Google just announced its redesign which allows you to access everything you want to know about that book in one place. “We’ve redesigned Google Books so people can now quickly access details like the book’s description, author’s history and other works, reader reviews and options for where you can purchase or borrow the book. And for those using Google Books for research, each book’s bibliographies are located prominently on the page and the citation tool allows you to cite the source in your preferred format, all in one spot.” See: https://www.blog.google/products/search/15-years-google-books/
The video on the above website includes how a genealogist, Lisa Lisson, uses Google Books. It also advises where you may purchase or borrow the book.
To go to NEW Google Books see: https://www.google.com/books/edition/A_Wrinkle_in_Time/r119-dYq0mwC?hl=en&gbpv=0
On Google books you can search for a phrase or a word, ancestral names, towns etc.
Jan Meisels Allen Chairperson, IAJGS Public Records Access Monitoring Committee
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New World War ll Russian Army Database
Jan Meisels Allen
The Ministry of Defense of the Russian Federation is commemorating the 75th anniversary of World War ll’s Allied victory by creating a new database called Memory Road which contains photos of WWll Soviet Army veterans. Currently, there are over 302,000 veterans documented with their personal photos. Each page on veterans has a link to the Memory of the People database which includes the millions of awards given to Soviet Army service people.
Memory Road can be searched by first name, patronymic name (honoring the father usually the middle name such as Ivanovich) or last name. Go to https://foto.pamyat-naroda.ru/ Yes, it is in Russian, but if you use Chrome as your browser it will translate it. You can also use Google Translate https://translate.google.com/ or another translation service such as DeepL https://www.deepl.com/translator or go to Steve Morse’s website for translating Russian to English https://stevemorse.org/russian/eng2rus.html
According to an article in Lost Russian Family blog: https://lostrussianfamily.wordpress.com/2019/10/19/new-wwii-soviet-army-database-gives-faces-to-veterans/ the best way to use the database is: Copy the name in the box on the top right that says найти героя Open each result link in a new window. If you don’t, the website requires you to restart the search. Copy and paste all text into one of the translation services mentioned above.
There is also the opportunity to upload and add a photo. Directions are included at: https://foto.pamyat-naroda.ru/about
Jan Meisels Allen Chairperson, IAJGS Public Records Access Monitoring Committee
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Re: In Search for DEUTSCH Antal
Dear Amit,
Szegenyhaz Ter is a street address. Ter would be what we call a square. According to the book, Jewish Budapest: Monuments, Rites, History by Kinga Frojimovics, page 316, this street was part of District VII or Erzsébetváros and translates to "Poorhouse Square". This page is digitized on Google Books. I found a death record for Antal on 6 May 1905. It says he was born in Ujpest and he was 48 years old when he died. https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:S3HT-6PR9-XR?i=161 Good luck searching, Judi Gyory Missel Mesa, Arizona
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Re: Aleph Yud - what does it mean?
binyaminkerman@...
Unless you know otherwise, I think it is most likely to stand for Eretz Yisrael, meaning born in the land of Israel.
Binyamin Kerman
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Re: Aleph Yud - what does it mean?
Susan Rosin
Good Morning,
I would think it means "Eretz Israel" in Hebrew: ארץ ישראל Regards, Susan
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Re: Aleph Yud - what does it mean?
David Lewin
In Ivrit we always have the " to show that the letters are an
abbreviation - usually before the last letter of a string. It does
not aid the meaning.
toggle quoted messageShow quoted text
Show me the original Hebrew document, maybe there are some more clues? David
At 17:25 26/10/2019, Amiel Moskona wrote:
Thank you. I didn’t mention (sorry) that it’s written: aleph “ yud. Maybe that provides a better clue?
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Re: #CryptoJewry #Sephardic #Israel
#israel
Dear brothers and sisters,
I appreciate every help. I applied for Sephardic citizenship online last September 2019 at FCJE.org for my certificate and waiting for approval. I've message them about my passport which is already expired last year, and I cannot get a new one because I need to submit to USCIS next month for my US citizenship. My brothers and I are happy to see our Sephardic family in Spain. Every time that I heard killing Jews it makes me cry because it reminds me about my family who escaped from Spain. Thank you for your concern, and GOD bless!
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SIG group mailings
Jeff at SG
I rarely receive the SIG digests anymore.
When I click on the 'View all your groups.jewishgen.org' or 'Edit your subscriptions here' links I see the only thing I seem subscribed to is "Main". And on that screen i was sent to I can find no way to add or check on my SIG subscriptions. I am posting this topic on the Main list because I am sure a lot of people would like to know the answer. The last message I sent to support only got me a default form reply with a link that did not accept either my new or old jewishgen passwords. So I gave up. Please don't send me another default response because I cannot access the reply. My passwords don't work. Please just answer my question on the Main list so I and the many others in my position can benefit. Thank you! Jeff Malka
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Re: Aleph Yud - what does it mean?
Amiel, shalom and shavua tov, Whenever you and all our genders find this kind of "mystery", it can easily be solved here: http://www.kizur.co.il/home.php This is a site that gives the meaning of RASHEI TEVOT. The most common meaning of א"י is Eretz Israel (ארץ ישראל), but there are other ones, as you can see here: http://www.kizur.co.il/search_word.php?abbr=%D7%90%D7%99&searchby=abbr&m=1 I hope this helps! All the best, Judite Orensztajn, Jerusalem
From: main@... <main@...> On Behalf Of AmielM@...
Good day. In the 1932 census in Tzfat, my great-grandmother's country of birth and nationality is described in Hebrew letters as "Aleph Yud". Could someone shed a light as to what it means? I guess it's an acronym, but I cannot find its meaning.
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Re: Can anyone tell me how long has the name Neta ( × Ö¶×˜Ö·×¢ ) has been in use?
rv Kaplan
Google shows examples eg Natan Nota Eibeschutz, Natan Nota Kozlowsky, Natan Nota Ragoler etc. Does Nota come from the same root as Neta?
Harvey Kaplan Glasgow, Scotland
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